Figure 6.1. Taoist Church and
Imported Buddhist Schools, 300–500
300
142 “Pao Ching-yen” (Taoist
radical, mythical?)
143 Wang Pao (Taoist magician)
144 Wei Hua-Ts’un (woman;
“revelations” of Taoist
scriptures)
145 Tu Ching (Taoist church
leader)
146 Sun Tai (f. Taoist sect)
(147) Sun En (Taoist rebel, south
coast)
148 Yang Hsi (“revelations” of
Taoist scriptures)
149 Hsü Mi (Taoist theologian)
150 Hsü Hui (Taoist)
i 151 Hsü Mai (father of 149)
(152) Wang Hsi-chih (1st great
calligrapher)
153 “Pure Conversation” circle
154 Yin Hao (Buddhist layman)
155 Sun Ch’o (Buddhist, sync. w
Taoism and Confucianism)
156 Wang Pan-chih (Confucian,
criticized Taoism)
157 Ko Ch’ao-fu (Ko family;
estab. Taoist scriptures)
158 Ts’ui Hao (Confucian, Taoist,
Northern Wei minister;
persecuted Buddhism)
159 K’ou Ch’ien-chih (Taoist
“pope” in Northern Wei state)
160 Mao Hsui-chih (Taoist
disciple)
161 Ch’eng-Kung Hsing (Buddhist)
162 Shih T’an-ying (Buddhist)
163 Fa-hsian (Buddhist pilgrim, tr.
Lotus sutra)
164 Chih-yen (Buddhist traveler to
Kashmir)
i 165 Buddhabhadra (Buddhist
monk from Kashmir)
166 T’an-chi (Madhyamika
“Three Treatise school”)
167 Seng-tao (Sautrantika school)
168 Seng-sung (Sautrantika school)
169 Seng-jui (Buddhist)
170 Hui Kuan (Buddhist, debated
Tao Sheng vs. sudden
Enlightenment)
400
171 Fa-yen (Pure Land)
172 Fa-hao (Pure Land)
173 Chu Fa-t’ai (Pure Land)
174 T’an Chi
175 Seng-lang (Madhyamika,
separated from Sautrantika)
176 Fa-yao (pop. Nirvana sutra
preacher, south China)
177 Ro-ling (same)
178 Seng-yu (continued Tao-An’s
catalogue of Buddhist texts)
179 Fan Chen (skeptic
anti-Buddhist, south China)
180 Hsün Chi (same)
181 Ku Huan (anti-Buddhist,
compiled Taoist scriptures)
182 Lu Hsin-ch’ing (Taoist
reformer, compiler, alc)
183 Sun Yu-yueh (Taoist,
Southern capital)
184 T’ao Hung-ching (f. Taoist
sect; occultist, alc)
185 Chou Yung (Buddhist
syncretizer w Taoism and
Confucianism)
186 Chang Jung (same)
187 Meng Ching-I (same)
Keys to Figures • 911